Example library
Gaslamp Mystery Examples
Gaslamp scenes thrive on manners, access, evidence, and reputation. These examples give you social rooms where a clue can be noticed, concealed, misread, or made public at exactly the wrong time.
The Brass Orchid Room
Scene frame: A private supper room above a conservatory, warm with pipe heat, citrus peel, wet umbrellas, and the hiss of gas lamps behind green glass shades.
Keeper: Mme. Ivara Sol keeps the guest register in a locked music box that only opens while a particular waltz is played correctly.
NPC pressure: A patent clerk is hiding a burned cuff, a widowed inventor insists the clockwork lilies are listening, and a young magistrate is buying silence with theater tickets.
Rumor: The conservatory roses bloom white whenever the wrong person signs the register.
Hidden problem: Someone replaced the music box's cylinder to remove three names from the evening record.
Scene hook: The clockwork lilies all turn toward the party when the false waltz begins.
- Easy clue: The burned cuff smells of lamp oil, not fireplace ash.
- Pressure: The dinner toast begins in ten minutes, after which the register is locked away.
- Consequence: Exposing the missing names protects the record but ruins a family alliance.
- Escalation: The conservatory vents open and scatter pale petals over the guilty table.
The Cinder Rail Buffet
Scene frame: A dining car detached beside a fog-bound station, where soot stripes every window and the silverware trembles whenever a train passes nearby.
Keeper: Barlow Finch serves coffee strong enough to hide medicine and knows every conductor who has ever changed a timetable for money.
NPC pressure: A station porter carries two identical luggage tags, a grieving aunt refuses to leave the platform, and a newspaper artist keeps sketching a passenger no one else remembers.
Rumor: A whistle was heard from Track Six, which has been walled over for twelve years.
Hidden problem: The detached dining car is still receiving orders through an old pneumatic tube from somewhere under the station.
Scene hook: A steaming tube canister arrives at the buffet counter addressed to one of the characters by childhood nickname.
- Easy clue: The canister paper is dry, but the ink smells like tunnel water.
- Pressure: The fog will lift when the next express arrives, breaking up the witnesses.
- Consequence: Opening Track Six may reveal a crime the station was built to hide.
- Escalation: A sealed carriage door bangs from the outside though no train is attached.
The Velvet Index
Scene frame: A reading lounge below a legal archive, scented with dust, hot ink, velvet chairs, and the bitter tea served to people waiting for verdicts.
Keeper: Oswin Pell rents reading lamps by the hour and quietly changes their shades depending on whether a patron is being watched.
NPC pressure: A clerk is erasing a court number from their palm, a retired inspector pretends to sleep under a newspaper, and a socialite is memorizing obituary columns.
Rumor: The archive keeps a shelf of legal cases that have not happened yet.
Hidden problem: Someone is using the lounge lamps to signal which archive requests should disappear before filing.
Scene hook: Every lamp turns red except the one at the party's table.
- Easy clue: The red lamps point toward request slips with the same clerk initials.
- Pressure: Archive staff collect all request slips at closing bell.
- Consequence: Saving the marked request protects a witness but alerts the court fixer.
- Escalation: The retired inspector wakes and arrests the wrong person loudly on purpose.
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Gaslamp Generator Guide
Review the reusable clue, access, reputation, and polite-pressure patterns behind these examples.
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